Spike in mobile lawsuits spurs changes in courts, business models

The dramatic increase in the number of mobile industry lawsuits is forcing changes in the legal system and spurring new business models around patent licensing.

The number of handset patent lawsuits in U.S. courts went from 24 cases in 2006 to 84 in 2010, said David McDonald, an attorney at K&L Gates.

The spike in suits is happening for a number of reasons. "Today, it's a lot more complex to resolve the IP gap between what you own and what you need," said Mario Obeidat, head of licensing for telecommunications at Intellectual Ventures, a company that primarily acquires patents and earns revenue by licensing them. A mobile phone today requires 70,000 to 100,000 patents, he said.

It used to be that just a few companies controlled the bulk of the necessary patents and they would sign cross-licensing deals with each other, often without any money changing hands, he said. Now, however, with smartphones that include new functionalities, patents from companies in other industries, like photography, are required. Cross-licensing deals are much more difficult to make if the bulk of each company's licenses are irrelevant to each other. "The dynamics are much more complex," he said.

The U.S. International Trade Commission and prominent judges are beginning to make some changes to handle the surge of cases, McDonald and other legal experts said this week during a Law Seminars conference in Seattle.

"If you have the same six administrative judges you had 15 years ago [in the ITC] and the case volume has quadrupled, something has to give," said McDonald.

One way the ITC appears to be trying to reduce its case load is to address the question of whether "non-practicing entities," or organizations that collect patents but don't use them to build products or services, should be able to bring cases in front of the ITC. Since the ITC takes cases that have an impact on U.S. domestic industry, there's a question about whether simply owning a patent and licensing it constitutes a domestic industry, McDonald said.

Last month, the ITC issued a new rule that comes into affect this Friday that will allow the ITC to require participants to submit information regarding the impact of a case on the public interest. The new rule will also allow more public comment on the potential public impact of cases before the ITC. Such submissions could allow the ITC to decide against considering some cases if it finds that they are unlikely to have much impact on the public.

There also may be some changes to the way that the courts handle patent cases. Recently, a prominent judge gave a speech where he suggested that courts should start determining how much time they spend on a case based on how much the case might be worth. "The court may then tailor its timing and procedures to make sure a billion-dollar case gets a 'billion-dollar' process and a thousand-dollar case gets its due as well," said Judge Randall Rader, who presides over the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas but also serves as the chief judge of the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit.

The process of determining the potential value of a case could prove interesting to the parties in a case, McDonald noted. "If you're a defendant, you don't ever want to tell the plaintiff what they might win," he said.

The ballooning number of lawsuits is also spurring experimentation with new business models, some designed to profit from the activity and others that could potentially help companies better manage the new litigious environment.

For instance, some companies are starting to try out the patent privateer model, said Davina Inslee, IP counsel for Vulcan, Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen's company. A patent privateer obtains an exclusive license to intellectual property or buys the patents from a company typically in order to sue the competitor of the original patent holder. The deals are set up in a variety of ways such that the original patent owner might get a return on legal wins or they may simply get the benefit of not having to absorb the expense of litigation, she said.

In addition, because the patent privateer is not an operating company, there's no threat of a court imposing an injunction on the company that originally owned the license.

One example of a company using this model is MobileMedia Ideas, which bought patents from Nokia and Sony and sued Apple, HTC and Research In Motion. Similarly, Round Rock Research bought several thousand licenses from Micron and has licensed them to or formed covenants not to sue with Apple, Sony, Samsung, IBM, LG and others.

Mosaid operates in a similar vein. It is managing thousands of Nokia patents and absorbing the cost of litigation in exchange for a portion of proceeds of any winning suits.

Patent aggregators are also popping up to help companies avoid suits or quickly settle them. RPX, for instance, is amassing patents and offering companies a yearly subscription, giving them rights to the patents in the portfolio.

Obeidat categorizes Intellectual Ventures as an aggregator and hopes that more companies follow its model. Rather than offering a subscription, Intellectual Ventures licenses its entire portfolio, which currently comprises 35,000 patents, to its customers.

"We're hopeful others will see our business model and will do similar things," he said. In that case, a phone maker could sign licenses with three or four companies like Intellectual Ventures for all their needs rather than having to work with hundreds of license owners, he said.

While Obeidat positioned his company as helpful to the wireless industry, many people are critical of the company because it typically threatens a lawsuit before signing a licensing deal with its customers.

Still, he says that his scenario shifts the industry more toward commercial transactions, he said. "You're always going to have to resolve some disputes in litigation. But at the rate we're going, it's not sustainable."

The screen was particularly good. It is bright and visible from most angles, however heat is an issue, particularly around the Windows button on the front, and on the back where the battery housing is located.

My first impression after unboxing the Q702 is that it is a nice looking unit. Styling is somewhat minimalist but very effective. The tablet part, once detached, has a nice weight, and no buttons or switches are located in awkward or intrusive positions.

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